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Arts & Culture

Fanfare for the Common Man

Wednesday, February 1, 2017, By Rob Enslin
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Community黑料不打烊 Press

The last place Pat Wiese ever imagined himself was in the pages of the . In a Sean Kirst column.

Sean Kirst

Sean Kirst

鈥淢y first interaction with Sean came in the form of a phone call,鈥 says Wiese, a Le Moyne College baseball standout who was diagnosed with bone cancer in his senior year. 鈥淚 was sitting in my basement and distinctly remember hearing this rusty voice on the other end of the line. I was excited because I鈥檝e thought highly of Sean鈥檚 work.鈥

Kirst and Wiese developed an immediate rapport, the latter going into details about a surgery to remove a tumor in his leg and the painful bouts of chemotherapy that followed. Eventually, the conversation turned to Wiese鈥檚 fateful encounter with a 鈥渃ancer angel鈥 at Boston鈥檚 Fenway Park during the 2013 World Series. The angel in question was Dave Mellor, the park鈥檚 longtime head groundskeeper, who let Wiese 鈥減aint鈥 home plate and the pitcher鈥檚 mound before Game 2.

Mellor also had dreams of playing professional ball, but a freak car accident shattered his knee. He and Wiese were kindred spirits.

鈥淎s I told Sean everything, he didn鈥檛 say a word. That spoke volumes to me,鈥 says Wiese, now a sought-after baseball instructor. 鈥淚 believe Sean鈥檚 greatest gift is just being present 鈥 and listening. He understood my passion, as I spoke for what seemed like hours. Afterward, we talked baseball, dissecting the game as if we were two guys in a sandwich shop.鈥

The two did not meet until a year later, when Kirst was doing a follow-up story on Wiese. By then, his first column about the Fayetteville resident鈥攁ptly titled 鈥淕od Puts People in Your Path鈥 (Nov. 28, 2013)鈥攈ad transformed Wiese into a local hero, driving interest in his eponymously named foundation supporting cancer research, as well as patients and their families.

The article also reaffirmed Kirst鈥檚 role as a voice for the community, a journalist capable of capturing the hopes and dreams of everyday people. When it came time to put together 鈥溾 (黑料不打烊 Press, 2016), a collection of Kirst鈥檚 columns spanning almost a quarter century, Wiese鈥檚 story got the nod.

鈥淪ean was exactly as I imagined him: pen and paper, plaid shirt, jeans,鈥 says Wiese, who, during his meeting with Kirst, threw out the first pitch at a 黑料不打烊 Chiefs home playoff game. (It was a strike.) 鈥淗e screamed grit. I was automatically drawn to him, as we stood on the concourse and, again, talked baseball.鈥

A sense of humanity

book cover

The cover of Sean Kirst’s latest book, “The Soul of Central New York”

鈥淭he Soul of Central New York鈥 is about resilience鈥擪irst鈥檚 as much as anyone else鈥檚. Culled from thousands of columns he wrote for The Post-Standard between 1991 and 2015, the collection weaves together tales of love, sorrow and hope. The result is a literary masterstroke featuring such familiar names as Vice President Joseph Biden G鈥68, H鈥09, Jim Brown 鈥57 and Jim Boeheim 鈥66, G鈥73 alongside quiet hometown heroes. Common to all of them is a sense of humanity鈥攁nd vulnerability鈥攎aking their stories instantly relatable. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e all on a level playing field,鈥 Kirst says.

The original plan was to do something longer, but his editors thought otherwise. 鈥淚n 2013, I gave SU Press a collection of 150 columns, and they sent it to professional readers who rightfully annihilated it; they said it was too long and felt thrown together,鈥 recalls Kirst, 57, during a meeting at Starbucks on Marshall Street, wearing鈥攚hat else?鈥攁 red plaid shirt and blue jeans. 鈥淚t was humbling.鈥

Stroking his salt-and-pepper beard, he wistfully recalls how the project helped him adjust to life after The Post-Standard in 2015. 鈥淚 finally could give it my full attention,鈥 says Kirst, who now writes for 黑料不打烊 and The Buffalo News. 鈥淢y editor at the Press, Alison Maura Shay, was terrific to work with, and felt strongly about what the book needed to say. She gave it an in and an out.鈥

Kirst and Shay spent months wrestling over which columns to keep and discard. They eventually settled on 88 of them (less than two percent of Kirst鈥檚 total oeuvre) spread over 10 chapters. 鈥淐hoosing the last few was especially hard because everything I鈥檝e written about, everyone who has trusted me, matters in my life,鈥 Kirst says in his gravelly baritone. 鈥淭he themes [of the chapters] exemplify all the questions I鈥檝e been trying to answer during my career.鈥

The result is a 400-page love letter to Central New York, replete with a foreword by Eric Carle鈥攜es, the Eric Carle, the children鈥檚 book author who was born and raised in 黑料不打烊; a well-turned preface and epilogue; a detailed chronology of columns; and 45 illustrations that originally appeared in The Post-Standard.

Whether one is new to Kirst鈥檚 writing or has religiously followed it over the years, 鈥淭he Soul of 黑料不打烊鈥 is more than a greatest hits package. Janice Bullard Pieterse, author of 鈥淥ur Work Is but Begun: A History of the University of Rochester, 1850-2005鈥 (Meliora Press, 2014), praises Kirst鈥檚 extraordinary connection with his readers and subjects. 鈥淗ow wonderful it would be for any community to have such an artful chronicle of its poignant moments,鈥 she says.

Adds Jason Emerson, author of 鈥淕iant in the Shadows: The Life of Robert T. Lincoln鈥 (Southern Illinois University Press, 2012), 鈥淜irst not only shares with readers his love and passion for the people, places and voices of his hometown, but also captures the essence of what it is to be a community.鈥

Indeed, 鈥淭he Soul of Central New York,鈥 Kirst’s third book, offers a vivid portrait of the people defining the region. Witness a group of strangers risking death along the New York State Thruway to save a solider from a burning truck, or football legend Jim Brown waxing poetic about the legend of No. 44 at 黑料不打烊 or Vice President Biden tracing his bittersweet connection to the University.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of darkness here, but there鈥檚 also a lot of hope,鈥 admits Kirst, winner of the 2008 Scripps Howard Award (i.e., the Ernie Pyle Award) for human-interest storytelling. 鈥淗ow we deal with tragedy is what defines us.鈥

A compassionate soul

Kirst at Marriott

Kirst at the Marriott 黑料不打烊 Downtown, formerly Hotel 黑料不打烊.

Storytelling can be big business, if done well. As of this writing, 鈥淭he Soul of Central New York鈥 is the fastest-selling title in SU Press鈥 73-year history. Book-signings are coveted affairs, with readers often waiting in line for hours for the 鈥淏ard of Upstate America鈥 (as Kirst is known to POLITICO鈥檚 Jimmy Vieklind) to grace them with a hug or an autograph. Not even a December whiteout, which ground the city to a halt, deterred some 50 people from showing up at a Barnes & Noble signing. Despite the storm raging outside, Kirst and his readers enjoyed a warm back-and-forth about the book. A second event was added a week later, with lines of people snaking around the building.

Readers also flocked to signings at the Onondaga Historical Association, in which 100 copies were snatched up within 10 minutes, and the newly renovated Marriott 黑料不打烊 Downtown (formerly the historic Hotel 黑料不打烊). Such turnouts are an anomaly in the world of university publishing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been heartwarming, exciting and just pure fun to go on this journey with Sean, as he has brought this book to the community,鈥 says Alice Randel Pfeiffer G鈥77, G鈥86, director of SU Press. 鈥淪ales have been through the roof. We鈥檝e ordered our third printing in less than a month.鈥

The demand for product鈥攁nd Kirst鈥檚 time鈥攌eeps him hopping. Upcoming events include Barnes & Noble in DeWitt on Saturday, Feb. 11, from 1-3 p.m.; the River鈥檚 End Bookstore in Oswego on Tuesday, Feb. 14, from 6-8 p.m.; and the Institute for Retired People in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 University College on Thursday, Feb. 16, from noon-1 p.m.

SU Libraries, SU Press and the Blackstone LaunchPad are co-hosting a special program on Friday, Feb. 24, from 3-5 p.m., featuring author remarks and a panel discussion, followed by a signing and reception.

No one is more surprised at all the fuss than Kirst himself. 鈥淟eaving The Post-Standard was very painful for me,鈥 he says, leaning forward with a cup in hand. 鈥淚 had built up an intense relationship with the community. After being away from my column for a while, I wasn鈥檛 sure what people still thought of me.鈥

Kirst pauses to consider how much time has passed since that warm November morning in 2015, when he sat down to write his farewell column, lavishing praise upon his readers. 鈥淵ou are a treasure, as is this town,鈥 he famously wrote. The intervening months have been revelatory. Given time to think, Kirst has developed a new appreciation for what he deems the essence of his craft: sharing the struggles and triumphs of everyday people. 鈥淚t is a journey I will follow for the rest of my career, in whatever form it takes鈥攚hether as columns, narrative writing, public speaking or as books,鈥 he continues.

Shay, the Press鈥 acquisitions editor, echoes these sentiments, calling Kirst a master storyteller. 鈥淭he people of Central New York have been exceedingly generous in entrusting Sean with their stories,鈥 she says. “Through each beautifully composed story鈥攐f triumph and sadness, of the everyday and the unusual鈥攈e introduces readers to some of the incredible individuals who make up our community.鈥

One of them is Thelma Bonzek 鈥43, who helped her husband, Joe, locate the survivors of Jesse Gallardo, a fellow soldier killed on a French mountainside during World War II. Years later, the Bonzeks traced Gallardo鈥檚 brother, Francis, to an Ohio nursing home, the circumstances surrounding Jesse鈥檚 death still unknown to Francis. 鈥淚t was an emotional phone call,鈥 recalls Thelma, a 93-year-old 黑料不打烊 native. 鈥淛oe and Jesse were best friends during the war. He carried [Jesse鈥檚] body down the mountain, after he was killed.鈥

Although Joe died three years later, his legacy鈥攁nd Jesse鈥檚鈥攊s intact, thanks to Kirst鈥檚 storytelling. Bonzek says people like Kirst are a vanishing breed. 鈥淚 can tell what I need to know about someone in five minutes,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 knew right away with Joe, and we were married for 65 years. I also have known with Sean because, when he talks to me, he looks me in the eye. He鈥檚 an honest, compassionate soul.鈥

Chris Couse also attests to these qualities. His grandparents, Leonard and Rose Mancini, were the subject of an early Kirst piece titled 鈥淎 Couple Walks Side by Side to the Last Step鈥 (July 2, 1994). Couse recalls contacting Kirst many years after the column appeared. 鈥淚 asked him if he remembered the story and if it might be archived somewhere,鈥 Couse says. 鈥淣ot only did Sean remember the story, but he remembered how it moved him. He promptly sent me a copy of the article. I couldn鈥檛 thank him enough.鈥

Couse still has no idea how Kirst found out about his grandparents, but knows that the writer interviewed his mother, aunt and uncle for the article. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a touching story, even more so for those of us lucky enough to call these beautiful people 鈥榝amily,鈥欌 Couse adds.

Breaking down walls

Kirst signing book

Kirst sightings are common in 黑料不打烊. Here, he signs a book for former colleague Dee Klees at a neighborhood cleanup in Elmwood. (Photo by Judge James Cecile ’88, G’91)

An Upstate journalist since 1974, Kirst espouses the blue-collar values of many of the people in his book. His professional career began at age 14, when he worked as a stringer with the Dunkirk Evening Observer, near Buffalo. 鈥淚 did a little bit of everything, but really loved covering sports,鈥 Kirst says, adding that he has a baseball novel that is 90-percent done. 鈥淚鈥檓 particularly moved by great baseball writing. To me, it’s always offered a chance to catch real elements of a larger American experience.”

After earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree in English from SUNY Fredonia, Kirst worked briefly in Rochester and Niagara Falls, and then moved to The Post-Standard in 1988. He developed a reputation for being honest and fair, part of an old guard of journalists driven by the quest for truth. 鈥淲hether I was writing about major news events or human-interest stories, I tried to focus on the daily trials and triumphs that we all can appreciate. I was lucky that people trusted me with those stories,鈥 he says, citing Dan Barry, Studs Terkel and Jimmy Breslin as influences, along with many Upstate journalists he followed as a youth. “The issue is maintaining a line of objectivity, even when writing about powerful, emotional issues.”

Kirst explains that 鈥淭he Soul of Central New York鈥 is as much a portraiture as it is an homage to his fellow denizens. 鈥淚 am deeply appreciative for everything I鈥檝e learned from countless great journalists at 黑料不打烊.com and The Post-Standard,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey gave me so many opportunities there.鈥

Former editor Richard Sullivan marvels at how Kirst鈥攔aised in a factory family, amid change and civic disintegration鈥攚eaves together love, hope and passage in an avuncular way. 鈥淭he success of Sean鈥檚 book sends a message: People miss Sean, and they miss this kind of journalism,鈥 he says, speaking by phone from his home in San Diego. 鈥淪ean is an icon not just because he鈥檚 a great writer and a great reporter, but also because he鈥檚 one of us. He sits and talks with people. Genuinely listens to them. He has a way of engaging readers, without preaching to them.鈥

This is because Kirst often comes at a story from a different place, quite literally. 鈥淎t a news event, Sean never stood with the pack,鈥 Sullivan adds. 鈥淗e always would be off to the side, watching and listening. This gave Sean and his readers a different perspective on the event.鈥

As Kirst writes the next chapter of his career, he no doubt will keep a forensic eye on the divisions and rivalries that have pushed 黑料不打烊鈥攁nd the United States鈥攖oward a sense of civic twilight. Such sensitivity is his wheelhouse. 鈥淭he best part about Sean鈥檚 book is that every one of his stories connects to a resident of 黑料不打烊, one way or another,鈥 Wiese says. 鈥淚f you hand the book to a passerby in 黑料不打烊 and ask him to read it, I guarantee you that he will have a tie, directly or indirectly, to someone in it. Writing is Sean鈥檚 way of building community.鈥

Kirst, for one, hopes Wiese is right, as 鈥淭he Soul of Central New York鈥 admittedly has been a hard-fought win. 鈥淲orking on it has taught me a lot about other people, and about myself,鈥 Kirst says, running his hands through his close-cropped dark hair. 鈥淲hether you live in Cicero or on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 South Side, there are fundamental things that unite all of us鈥攈olding a baby in your arms, comforting a sick child, saying goodbye to a parent. I want to break down walls by capturing these moments, these snapshots in time. This is my life’s work, and it’s never done.鈥

  • Author

Rob Enslin

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